Surendra Mohanty


Surendra Mohanty born in Odisha was an author who wrote in Odia. He was the recipient of the Central Sahitya Academy Award for his novel Nilashaila.

Career

He was the president of Odisha Sahitya Academy from 1981 to 1987. He was also the first editor, and later chief editor for the newspaper The Sambad. He is a writer of short stories, novels, travelogues, criticism and biographies. He wrote around 50 books belonging to different genres. His well-known books are Mahanagarira Ratri, Maralara Mrutyu, Andha Diganta, and Mahanirvana. Yadubamsa O Anyaanya Galpa, Rajadhani O Anyaanya Galpa, Krushnachuda and Ruti O Chandra are his famous short stories.
Apart from being a litterateur, he was also active in politics. He was a member of Ganatantra Parishad. He was elected as a member of parliament in 1957 from Dhenkanal on Ganatantra parishad ticket. Later he joined Utkal Congress and was elected from Kendrapada constituency in 1971.

Awards

The four novels of Surendra Mohanty that are based on history, myth and legends are Nilasaila published in 1968, Niladri Bijaya published in 1980, Krushnavenire Sandhya published in 1985 and Ajibakara Attahasa published in 1987.

Nilasaila

The most widely read and acclaimed is "Nilasaila" which is contextualized in a crucial period of Orissa's history. The events of the novel take place between the years 1727 and 1736 when Ramachandradev, the king of Khurda who is revered by the people of Orissa as the representative of Jagannath, the presiding deity of the Oriya race, converts himself into Islam and marries the daughter of the Muslim ruler of Cuttack. But when the Muslim ruler of Cuttack invades Khurda and tries to destroy the idol of Lord Jagannath, Ramachandradev fights bravely to protect the idol which symbolizes Oriya identity and sentiment. The novel gives a truthful account of contemporary Orissa, but it is more than history. It is an intense portrayal of the religious and cultural
tradition of Orissa which is still an integral part of Oriya racial consciousness.

Niladri Bijaya

While Nilasaila ends with the idol of Lord Jagannath being shifted from its original place, the
ratna singhasana of Puri temple, to an island in the Chilika Lake, "Niladri Bijaya" narrates the triumphant return of the idol to its original abode. Though Ramachandradev is formally a Muslim, he is eager to restore the deity to the original place and he succeeds despite the fear of being attacked by the Muslim forces. The novel ends on a tragic note when Ramachandradev and his wife are debarred from entering the temple as being non-Hindus.

Krushnavenire Sandhya

The novel "Krushnavenire Sandhya", deals with another crucial period of Orissa's history when in the early sixteenth century, Prataprudradev, the king of Orissa, loses the battle with Krushnadeva Ray, the ruler of the Vijaynagar empire. Prataprudra is forced to surrender after his son Birabhadra commits suicide in the prison. Krushnadeva Ray, who is older than Prataprudra, marries his daughter Jaganmohini as a condition of the peace treaty. Prataprudra, in frustration and anguish, turns to spiritual life and becomes an ardent follower of Sri Chaitanya.

Ajibakara Attahasa

"Ajibakara Attahasa" is set in the third century BC when Buddhism was in a state of decadence,
eventually culminating in its bifurcation into the Mahayana and Hinayana sects. The novel
questions the Buddhist tenets of austerity and self-control and questions the traditional estimate of emperor Ashoka as a great votary of peace and spiritual life. This novel depicts Ashoka as a strategist who professed Buddhism to keep his subjects meek and submissive. It is an irony of history, the novel suggests, that Ashoka who killed lakhs of Oriyas in the Kalinga war is idolized as a great hero and a model king.

Complete list of works

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Biographies
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